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London's Ley Lines Pathways of Enlightenment

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By extending the St Pauls line he found it landed on a burial mound and had lots of manor houses along it. More than 100 years after they were first noted, and long after they became associated with paranormal activity and hidden energy, hardly anyone is convinced they exist, and if they do - who made them? Do you want to stay up to date with the latest news, views, features and opinion from across the city? The idea that ancient sacred sites might have been constructed in alignment with one another was proposed in 1846 by the Reverend Edward Duke, who observed that some prehistoric monuments and medieval churches aligned with each other. Akashic Records Reader, Crystal Author and Teacher, Gemma Petherbridge has spent 18 years working in the spiritual development industry, first as a practitioner, then as an events organiser supporting some of the biggest authors in the industry.

Watkins' would find Ley Lines by taking an Ordinance Survey map, dropping pins in locations of interest and then placing one end of a ruler from an important location like an old church or Neolithic site.What if we get as many people as possible to bless London’s undergound water and send healing, love and positive energy into it.

I have, randomly, looked at OS maps and church and tumuli type sites often do seem disproportionately to line up.

Building over old gathering sites does weird things to them; there are rebuilt parts of central London that remain permanently deserted. Anyone who has followed their paths across country will find that his life has been enriched, possibly deepened, by the experience.

Archaeologists and scientists regard ley lines as an example of pseudoarchaeology and pseudoscience. They also argued that in prehistory, as in the present, it was impractical to travel in a straight line across hilly or mountainous areas of Britain, rendering his leys unlikely as trade routes. MyLondon's brilliant newsletter The 12 is absolutely jam packed with all the latest to keep you keep you entertained, informed and uplifted.The archaeoastronomer Clive Ruggles noted that after the 1920s, "ley lines soon faded into obscurity". Looking back on the book's reception in 2000, Williamson noted that "archaeologists weren't particularly interested, and ley-line people were hostile". I have read the work of Chris Street and have,to respect much of what he says on this subject but I myself have serious doubts about the interlinking of ancient sacred sites into myriads of geometric patterns.

I recently visited the Medway valley in Kent however, and tried dowsing for the first time at the site of the Chestnuts long barrow (the owner of the site suggested trying this). We cannot be held responsible if a parcel has gone missing due to the postal address being filled in incorrectly or missing important information. I feel like a lot is missing and while reading the book I couldn't find anything with gravitas in the book. Hutton noted that it represented "the finest piece of surveying work" then undertaken by a pseudo-archaeologists in Britain; [28] however, Michell had included natural rock outcrops as well as medieval crosses in his list of Neolithic and Bronze Age monuments.According to his account, he was driving across the hills near Blackwardine, Herefordshire, when he looked across the landscape and observed the way that several features lined up together.

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